Often Irreverent, Mostly Rational Blog for Fans of the Toronto Blue Jays. One Day, We'll Be Perfect.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Visions of Farmland

And since we're already all talking about 2013...

(Actually, I started to think about 2014 last night. Stop me. It's a cry for help.)

Another offseason
consideration that's already snuck its way onto the radar is the matter
of Toronto's Triple-A affiliation for the coming years. Having spent
four years in Las Vegas, it would seem as though another venue might be
desirable for everyone involved.

This isn't to bag on
Vegas, because it seems as though the team and the city has done right
by the Jays for the most part, in spite of the fact that they were
joined in organizational matrimony mostly because they were the only two
wallflowers left without partners when the slow dance started.

(New ear worm: Chris De Burgh's "The Lady in Red". You're welcome.)

The
frustration with Vegas as a fan - and I presume for the front office, though perhaps that's a stretch, and they'd never tell either way - is that the results that are generated
there can only be viewed through the funhouse glass of the Pacific Coast
League. The numbers in the boxscores and in the accumulated tables of
stats are not trustworthy, and essentially meaningless if you're
attempting to discern the difference between potential prospects and
organizational players. Maybe that isn't a bad thing, as smarter people than I continue to point out that you can't scout a boxscore. Still, the results seem so skewed that it's almost impossible to tell what a player is actually doing in the PCL.

Moreover, the Jays really aren't able to give
their young pitchers a full season at Triple-A, because who would want
to subject their emerging arms to those conditions? So pitchers are asked to repeat a level and get extra seasoning at Double-A, when it might be beneficial for them to have a three-month stint at Triple-A before coming up.

These gripes are obvious at this point, but the question now is: What's the alternative?

According to Mike McCann's MinorLeagueSource.com, there are currently 11 Triple-A franchises that have yet to come to a
agreement for the next two years on their Player Development Contracts.
They are as follows, with current affiliation in brackets:

International League

Buffalo Bisons (New York NL)

Pawtucket Red Sox (Boston)

Rochester Red Wings (Minnesota)

Pacific Coast League

Albuquerque Isotopes (Los Angeles NL)

Fresno Grizzlies (San Francisco)

Iowa Cubs (Chicago NL)

Las Vegas 51s (Toronto)

Memphis Redbirds (St. Louis)

Nashville Sounds (Milwaukee)

New Orleans Zephyrs (Miami)

Oklahoma RedHawks (Houston)

Looking at that list, I'd scratch Pawtucket given their
long affiliation with the Boston. (And who would want ANOTHER farm team
in the Red Sox nation?) It's also a pretty reasonable guess to say that
Fresno, Memphis, and Iowa. Albuquerque is a bit of a wild card, though by most accounts, the Dodgers' return to the city in 2008 has been successful at the gate in a new-ish facility. The Astros were forced into Oklahoma City when the Nolan Ryan-owned Round Rock Express switched over to the Rangers, but from a disctance, it seems as though

All of which leaves three PCL cities with a historical perception
of being somewhat undesirable for a variety of reasons (Las Vegas, Nashville and New Orleans) and two IL teams, in Buffalo and Rochester.

Baseball America's Josh Leventhal reported back in May that while there shouldn't be much movement in affilations this offseason, Toronto's desire to move closer to home was clear. Beyond geography, the Jays should be amply motivated to pursue both of those IL alternatives, if only to return to some semblance of normalcy when it comes to the development path they set out for their prospects. As a team that is placing a greater emphasis on the minor league system, you have to imagine that they'd much rather see the Lansing Three pitching primarily in the Northeast as opposed to the high deserts of the Southwest.

I know fans are going to stampede towards the choice of
Buffalo as the most natural fit, but given that we've already been down
that road once and come away empty, it's worth taking a glance at what
the other possibilities are. If the Bisons re-up with the Mets, Rochester is hardly a consolation prize. While not quite as close to the GTA, Rochester has multiple flights to Toronto daily, and sits just across Lake Ontario. If anyone ever had the notion to begin running that ferry service across the lake again, you could say that minor leaguers getting the call were "riding the ferry" to the big club.

Okay, maybe I'm a little to attached to a nice turn of phrase. Still, a large portion of the Jays' fanbase from Oshawa through Kingston to Ottawa would only be a few hours away from the top affiliate.

The forthcoming offseason will be fascinating for a number of reasons, but in an amongst the multitude of free agent and trade rumours that are certain to occupy the time of Jays fans, this affiliation agreement may be the most important deal that the team signs over the winter.

8 comments:

As a native Burqueño, I'd say the chances of ABQ being available as a AAA city are close to nil. The Dodgers have had their top farm club here since the 70s (save for when there was no franchise here, and the few years after the new team showed up that we were a Marlins' club).

While I would love to see the Jays show up here, I'd probably be the only one in the city who felt that way.

Is crazy to believe that Vancouver could do a few renos and bump up to a AAA team? They were a AAA team about 10 years ago and left partly because the dollar was in the 60-65 cent range. At parity, it's a whole new 'ballgame.'

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